Now, a Black abortion doctor is playing the Planned Parenthood patsy by trying to “explain” and dismantle the argument that abortion targets the African American community.

Speaking at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, abortionist Willie Parker, who once called abortion a “sacred decision” said that not providing abortion is racist!

Parker traveled to Mississippi from Alabama to do abortions at the Jackson Women’s Health Organization abortion clinics, the last one remaining open in the state.

“I had a traditional understanding of religion and spirituality as a fundamentalist Protestant Christian with a born again experience at the age of 15. But, what that meant for me is that I took my religious belief and understanding very seriously. And so, because of that, while I had not had any explicit teaching that abortion was wrong, although it was kind of implied given that, in my community there were many teens and single women who were forced to continue pregnancies where they were ready or able to parent or not. I chose to err on the side of not violating my conscience or understanding by not providing abortions event though I never questioned a woman’s right to make that decision,” Parker tells his audience.

Planned Parenthood recently “honored” the abortionist during Black History Month 2015 even placing abortionist Willie Parker on their list of Dream Keeper “Doers.”

Abortionist Willie Parker told his Woodrow Wilson School audience that Mississippi is one of the poorest states in the country and we all know the large Black population there.

Pro-lifers know that abortion targets Black communities and Parker is assisting in that agenda, “Women of color and women living in poverty are two communities that are often synonymous but are not always the same tend to have higher rates of unintended pregnancy…”

“That this is the reality befalling Mississippi led me to conclude that the women of Mississippi are amongst the most vulnerable in this country. And hence they are in dire need and very much deserving of my help,” the abortionist boasted.

Abortionist Parker who described himself as “a self described protector of human rights” claims that if he could not make women of color a priority for abortion access, who will?

Parker then goes on to attack those who defend the black unborn child, especially those who are members of the African American pro-life community.

“Now don’t misunderstand me,” he said, “This commitment is not a form of subtle tribalism, because I understand all-too-well as Zora Neale Hurston once said, All my skin folk ain’t my kinfolk.”

“And, what I mean by that is that some of the most ardent opponents who stand in solidarity with those who oppose abortion are, in my opinion, misguided people of color who also vilify women who make the decision to have abortion, and who exaggerate and expound on the fact that those women are poor and women of color. And, they are the ones who also co-sign, what I call the Black Genocide campaigns,” Willie Parker stated.

I guess Parker is also referring to the early members of the civil rights community who also pointed out the genocidal aspects of abortion and birth control as I document here.

Leaders like, Fannie Lou Hamer, who co-founded the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and challenged the all white Mississippi delegation for seating at the 1964 Democrat convention in Atlanta City

Hamer once stated, “Once Black women were bought as slaves because they were good breeders. Now they talk about birth control and abortion for blacks. If they’d been talking that way when my mother was bearing children, I wouldn’t be here now”.

But…I digress…

According to the latest figures by the CDC almost 56% of all abortions reported for race were done on minority women. Of the 405,994 abortions even reported for race or ethnicity in that latest report, 150,942 (37.2%) were performed on White women, 146,856 or (36.2%) were reported on Black women. Hispanic women accounted for 79,408 or (19.7%) while 28,363 or (7.0%) of abortions were categorized as other.

Even abortionist Willie Parker cannot dispute the facts as he says himself:

“One of the things I want to say to kind of demonstrate to you how pressing that issue [Black Genocide] is, when I started in Mississippi, as noble as I thought my efforts were, not everyone was happy to see me.”

“What allows [pro-life people] to make that allegation [abortion is a tool of Black Genocide] is a misrepresentation of the very real and concrete epidemiological evidence that shows that disproportionately on a proportionate basis the highest rate of abortion occurs to the Black women followed by Latino women…”

Parker goes on to say that White women have the highest number of abortions, “because there are more white women then there are women of color,” he says.

But the real motivation behind Willie Parker’s attempt to disprove the abortion is Black Genocide argument is that it is having an affect within the African American community.

“While the legal battle over abortion is occurring at the state and local level as they try and set the stage for overturning Roe – the actual cultural battle for the hearts and minds of the public, is being fought in these ideological wars and framing abortion in ways that are totally misrepresentative over what the issue of abortion is about.”

“In this case they’ve decided as a very effective and cynical strategy to frame abortion as Black Genocide. And that campaign has gained traction over the years. There have been major African American Communities where billboards have been purchased to declare that the most dangerous place for a black baby is in the womb of it’s mother…describing Black babies as an endangered species as if they are something other than human in that- as if mothers are totally detached from the pregnancies that they carry.”

Parker claims that, “Abortion opponents allege that abortion is a genocidal plot by the government, fronted by Planned Parenthood to build abortion clinics in Black communities and to coerce Black women to use contraception and to have abortionists to kill off black babies…to decimate the Black race. They allege that there is a Negro plot that was put into place by the founder of Planned Parenthood – Margaret Sanger and that this is allegedly core to Planned Parenthood’s mission today.”

“Let’s say I concede all of these arguments are true,” Willie Parker says, “What does any of that have to do, in 2015, with a woman, no matter what her color is, making the decision to end a pregnancy, that she does not want?”

WILLIE PARKER DISMISSES MARGARET SANGER’S RACISM

Parker then dismisses the well documented racism pf Planned Parenthood founder, Margaret Sanger, an admitted Klan speaker. This is what Sanger wrote in her autobiography, “I accepted an invitation to talk to the women’s branch of the Ku Klux Klan…I saw through the door dim figures parading with banners and illuminated crosses…I was escorted to the platform, was introduced, and began to speak…In the end, through simple illustrations I believed I had accomplished my purpose. A dozen invitations to speak to similar groups were proffered.” (Margaret Sanger: An Autobiography, P.366)

Parker, who profits off abortion, works with Planned Parenthood, and has received honors from them, thinks the Black Genocide argument against abortion is ridiculous, “And, with regard to Margaret Sanger’s involvement with the Black Community? Margaret Sanger uh uh started birth control clinics in the African American community in Harlem at the invitation of black leaders of her day.” he said.

Willie Parker completely ignores the documented plot devised behind the scenes by Sanger and her financier, Clarence Gamble, both active in the Eugenics Society to include blacks in their own demise.

This blog has documented this many times, just do a simple search under “eugenics”, “Margaret Sanger” or “Clarence Gamble.”

Willie Parker claimed that Sanger’s message would benefit African American women. I wonder if that was the focus of her speech to the Klan- how her ideas would benefit Blacks- really Willie are you that naive?

“And. so there was no targeted messaging for the Black community. In fact,” says Willie Parker, “Margaret Sanger in keeping with the rest of her day, her attention was to the White community,” he says.

Can you believe such ignorance? Sanger’s own words make a liar out of Dr. Willie Parker.

As late as 1950 Sanger who openly advocated eugenic sterilization wrote this in a personal letter to Katharine Dexter McCormick, an heir to the International Harvester fortune who used her immense wealth to fund the development of the birth-control pill.

Sanger wrote, “I consider that the world and almost our civilization for the next twenty-five years, is going to depend upon a simple, cheap, safe contraceptive to be used in poverty stricken slums, jungles, and among the most ignorant people. Even this will not be sufficient, because I believe that now, immediately; there should be national sterilization for certain dysgenic types of our population who are being encouraged to breed and would die out were the government not feeding them.”

Years earlier, in 1939, Sanger described the American Birth Control League’s Negro Project in a letter to fellow eugenicist, Clarence Gamble, “The minister’s work is also important and also he should be trained, perhaps by the Federation as to our ideals and the goal that we hope to reach. We do not want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellions members.”

Parker then calls the Black Genocide argument “noise” and “misleading” and “racial insulting.”

Then, Parker shockingly states that not providing abortion to Black women is the real racism:

“I usually reserve terms like brilliant for a positive thing but it is a dastardly jedi-mind trick,” he said.

“Because it exploits the notion that we, as a society are very uncomfortable with notions of race.And so, you take people who are well-meaning and want to help people who have the greatest need, in this case, disproportionate women of color.And,so the majority of the healthcare system is still White people, mostly white men, although that’s changing with the number of women. So, it really becomes racist NOT to provide this care.” abortionist Willie Parker said.

The abortionist, who slaughters children in the womb, ended his speech by sharing the thoughts he says he visits on a regular basis, “In order for this society to grow great,” he said, “collectively, we must continue to plant trees under which we will never see it sit. What that means for me is – we have to collectively and on an individual basis do things that will not directly benefit us personally – but that they’re the right things to do to make this world the kind of place that we would want to live in.”

Abortionist Willie Parker says that on a pretty consistent basis, he will look into the mirror and repeat that exaltation by, “that wise American sage, Dr. Seuss when he says in the Lorax that unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, Nothing is going to get better. It’s not.”

May I remind the abortionists that Dr. Suess is a children’s favorite – like- the ones he kills in the womb.

Abortionist Willie Parker, who claims abortion is sacred and that not offering it to Black women is racist is not a historian and has little to no knowledge of the eugenics movement, Margaret Sanger, or Planned Parenthood’s history. Sadly, Willie Parker is merely one of many Black mouthpieces the abortion lobby has paid off to help eliminate their own race.

If you want a clear and well documented history of abortion and the way it targets the black community- watch the powerful film- Maafa21.

[…] Saynsumthn’s Blog notes some remarks from abortionist Willie Parker, who claims it is racist not to give black women abortions. He once called abortion a “sacred decision.” Parker is known for attaching religious language to his decision to perform abortions. […]

If only you were as concerned for those children who were giving ‘life’ but languish in foster care. Or, do you put your money were you mouth is? How many foster children have you taken in, loved, nurtured, provided for…

How many have you adopted. You are for women spitting out babies as long as you don’t have to be bothered with the children once they are here regardless of what happens to them.

Millions of children are raped, sodomized, neglected and yet I have never Never heard the Pro-life peddlers speak out about these crimes.

If your money was were your mouth is then you could be taken seriously. We need to vote out and shut down anyone who is Pro-birth but not concerned with the fate of children unwanted, uncared for and abused.

You sure presume to know a lot about me and “every pro-lifer” – millions of us are out here and you know what we all do, right? For the record, society cannot kill children based on whether or not another group of people is charitable to those in need. That logic is simply ludicrous. No, Ann, we do not have to wait for a person as ignorant as you are to be convinced of anything to say MURDER is exactly what MURDER is. Nor, do we have to convince you to stand against it!